Asking
Only logged in members can reply and interact with the post.
Join SimilarWorlds for FREE »

Would you quit your job for $580,000? Practically every Mercedes Benz worker offered this deal went for it . . .


Photo above – Apollo the robot - from Aptronik -stalks a Mercede Benz assembly line. This appears to be a staged photo however, since this robot doesn’t have a screwdriver or pair of pliers.

The MSN article (link below) has some obvious problems with it, but I believe the basic premise – that assembly line workers know when the curtain is dropping – is accurate. Mercedes just had 4,000 guys raise their hands and say yes to a $580,000 buyout. I hope they don’t imagine that they are set for life, and can kick back watching Champions League soccer and chugging Becks until they are laid to rest. Those Euro Dollars won’t last that long, dummkopf.

German automakers have always had a love-hate relationship with high-priced, native-born labor. At one point VW//Porsche/Audi/Mercedes pressured the Bundesrat to pass a special law so they could import low factory wage workers from Turkey. To build the high-priced cars they export to everyone else. There are still 3 million Turkish migrants and kids of migrants living in The Federal Republic of Germany today, despite this sun having set on this experiment decades ago.

Robots are coming. That’s why German autoworkers took the buyout. Evidently Mercedes has a clever accountant (or an AI system) which figured out that you can hire a robot, maintain, and service it, for less than $580,000. Depending on the future cost of oil and electricity, of course.

Where the MSN article might take a wrong turn is when it asserts that Mercedes is trying to avoid “bad morale” with these buyouts, like the problems which could occur with involuntary terminations. This is the sort of rookie reporting mistake you’d expect a news agency like MSN to make, because it doesn’t know much about the EU. Forget the morale, MSN. It costs A LOT to terminate a worker in the EU. If you want to close a factor there are prenotifications, months or years in advance. This provides lead time for various government agencies to hold a Chinese fire drill of examining permits, paperwork, and legacy contracts. If those agencies can’t find a way to delay the closure, then legislative hearings are held, to protect politicians from blowback. Eventually that factory will close, no matter how many speeches are given on the floor of Bundesrat, and however many lawyers get involved. It’s an expensive mess, in addition to being bad for everyone’s morale. Especially the morale of MB shareholders, directors and career politicians seeking re-election.

This sort of thing is already happening in the USA, but on a smaller scale. Ford had plenty of takers on its most recent “$50,000 and wave goodbye” offer. Technically, this was early retirement. But the $50K applies with a hard stop (no pension?) at the end of the current contract for some workers.

The German deal doesn’t involve a pension like some of the Ford deals do. And Germany has a bigger safety net of health care, government subsidized housing, food assistance, public transportation, and probably discounts for the cheap seats at a Bayern Munchen soccer match.

When robots get hired, you don’t have to offer them a buyout later on, or pay them a pension, or have taxpayers provide housing assistance and healthcare for decades afterwards. You just replace those robots every few years, like you do with your Roomba, or a car.

I’m just sayin’ . . .


Turns Out Offering Up To $580,000 Is All It Takes To Make Auto Workers Quit
Top | New | Old
SatanBurger · 36-40, F
Yup. I'm not a person who spends on a whole lot except games and things every now and then. I could buy a house on the cheap or even a tiny home, make it almost near self sustainable and then invest some but save most of it.

So I would take it for that amount of money. There's a lot I could do if you factor that you could use the funds to getting to self sustainablity. Then have way over half left even.

This doesn't mean I wouldn't have to work but you can cut all your expenses in half doing things like that.
SusanInFlorida · 31-35, F
@SatanBurger i have seen the most fascinating ads for gorgeous tiny homes in my Facebook "reels" feed recently. 600 sf capsules in the middle of verdant forest clearings. Then i realized all the images - both the capsule and the forest - were CGI generated by some clever coder working for whoever makes these boxes. Prices range from $8,000 to $20,000. The market is still sorting itself out.
Yeah, see you later work
This comment is hidden. Show Comment
prostitutes, blood donors, or OnlyFans creators


Which are you?

@jshm2
SusanInFlorida · 31-35, F
@jshm2 i'm not sure autoworkers pensions are worthless. I can't speak for Germany, but in America UAW pensions are backed by the PBGC - pension board guarantee corporation. It's a government agency similar to the FDIC. If your employer goes bankrupt and the pension fund goes with it, they will guarantee retirees - present and future - a payout up to a maximum of $4,000 a month. Some workers who had been counting on $8,000 a month will feel they are getting screwed. So will American taxpayers, who will be on the hook for the pensions of bankrupt corporations.
This comment is hidden. Show Comment
wildbill83 · 41-45, M
probably a safe bet tbh. Mercedes sales are falling (as is the case with most over engineered, unreliable, luxury cars). Their commercial sales might keep them afloat for the foreseeable future, but the consumer market will probably be prone to downsizing & factory shutdowns anyways
SusanInFlorida · 31-35, F
@wildbill83 i saw a mercedes benz garbage truck a month or so ago. here, in florida.

i realize MB trucks are probably not luxury vehicles, but still? What municipality in their right mind buys a fleet of garbage trucks from Mercedes or Volvo? I guess maybe a city where one of the city council members owns an MB dealership, and "can get you a good deal"?
wildbill83 · 41-45, M
@SusanInFlorida I see MB service vans every now and then, usually companies further down state that rip everyone off anyways...
MoveAlong · 70-79, M
I'll take $580,000.00 for my wife right now and wait for robot technology to catch up.
SusanInFlorida · 31-35, F
@MoveAlong robots won't provide you with heirs. your lineage will die off, and be consigned to oblivion.
MoveAlong · 70-79, M
@SusanInFlorida That's what concubines are for.
AthrillatheHunt · 51-55, M
That’s probably 5/7 years salary up front
Khenpal1 · M
They are moving production to Poland 😂
SusanInFlorida · 31-35, F
@Khenpal1 several german carmakers have had assembly lines there for years. Even the USA is considered a "low cost labor market" for german brands (compared to Germany itself), but only if the factory is south of the Mason Dixon line and non-union.
Khenpal1 · M
@SusanInFlorida Mercedes-Benz is relocating the production of its electric Sprinter vans from its Ludwigsfelde plant near Berlin, Germany, to Jawor, Poland, due to high labor costs in Germany, which are reportedly five times higher than in Poland.
The Ludwigsfelde facility, which employs over 2,000 people and produces around 60,000 specialized Sprinter van variants and electric vehicles annually, is set to gradually wind down series production by the end of 2029.
The new plant in Jawor will be built on the site of Mercedes-Benz's existing operations, which have included engine and hybrid battery production since 2019.
The company plans to invest approximately €360 million (PLN 1.528 billion) in the project, creating at least 300 new jobs by 2027, including 30 for specialists with higher education.
This move is part of a broader restructuring of Mercedes-Benz's van business, initiated in May 2023, and follows a prior €1 billion investment in Poland to build the first electric-only van plant in the country.
The decision has sparked controversy, with German trade unionists and local authorities expressing strong opposition, citing concerns over job losses and economic impact, and protests are anticipated in Ludwigsfelde
FloorGenAdm · 51-55, M
[media=https://youtu.be/di99ZhM2AcI]
SusanInFlorida · 31-35, F
@FloorGenAdm i considered using this image - from I Robot - instead of the official MB factory robot image. I love movie references and screen caps.

but sonny the robot in that film actually has agency, and ends up saving mankind. I don't believe Apollo the car assembly robot has anything resembling those capabilities

 
Post Comment